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What we do: FREE BOOKS
We here at N.G.E. Far Press are digital publishers of FREE BOOKS. This primarily includes Free OER (Open Educational Resource) Textbooks in Philosophy and works of fiction that are Philosophically informed. Take a look at the catalog of textbooks in the left column and our catalog of fiction works in the right column. Blog and Page information is below. Click one of the Page tabs just above to visit that page for more information.

CFP: OER in Religion

CFP: Chapters for Introduction to Ethics OER textbook

Wanted:Philosophers to write brief chapters for lower-level
Philosophy textbooks for no money to create free textbooks for students to use
in perpetuity.

That’s right, I’m not going to pay you and no one’s going to
make any money off of this, and you’re going to release the work you create
under a CC-BY creative commons license for the primary purposes of making
education in Philosophy more affordable and accessible.

Long story short:I (Noah Levin, PhD, Associate Professor of Philosophy at Golden West College) want to primarily crowd-source two OER
(Open Educational Resource) textbooks in Philosophy, one for an intro-level
Ethics course and the other for an intro-level Philosophy of Western Religions
course, so I need people to write chapters for me (less than 10 pages in length and accessible to first-year college students). If you’re interested, keep reading.

Longer story: I have a sabbatical project to create two free Open
Educational Resource (OER) textbooks in Philosophy: one for an Introduction to
Ethics Class and one for a Philosophy of Western Religions Class (both at the
100 level). Part of these projects is that I get help writing them. I have
already created many completely free Philosophy textbooks (you can see them
here, and please do use them if you like them: http://ngefarpress.com), so
you can see that just because they are free does not lessen their quality or
usefulness in education. In fact, a majority of the writings in these free
textbooks are also contained in a majority of the most popular textbooks in
their areas. These textbooks I have created make use of materials that are old
enough to be out of copyright and be free or are so prevalent (like logic) that
there are quality free texts already out there. The same is not true for Ethics
(since contemporary topics are, by their very nature, recent) and Philosophy of
Religion (since a lot of good advancement has occurred in the past 30 years in
that field). So while Ancient Philosophy, Political Philosophy, Logic,
Introduction to Philosophy, and the Philosophies of South and East Asia are
easy to compile from existing free works (at the introductory level), Ethics
and Religion are not. These are the last 2 courses I teach that I do not use
OERs for, and I would very much like to have all of my courses use free texts.
So, will you pretty please help me write these textbooks?

Why write something for free? I can offer up 5 good reasons
that should be enough:

1)Academic
writing rarely ever pays anything. We should never fool ourselves: we always
pretty much write and publish for free to let others profit from our abilities.
It’s part of the game, one that we’re often happy to play for the love of the
craft.

3)No
one likes paying for textbooks. If you can spend some relatively small amount
of time on your end to save a lot of students a bit of their very hard-earned
money, you ought to do so because it is a categorical imperative, will maximize
utility, and will help cultivate the virtue of generosity.

4)You
will get a publication credit you can use! Just because it’s free and in a OER
doesn’t mean you didn’t do some real writing and make a real contribution to
education. Are you looking for some more lines on your CV? This would totally
help.

5)Satisfaction.
Writing something like this is very satisfying, and many students will
genuinely tell you that they appreciate your taking the time to contribute to
making their educations more affordable (without losing any quality).

I would like to have authors identified and beginning work
by Mid-February, 2019. The final deadline for finished chapters will be April
1. Please contact me for more information at: nlevin@gwc.cccd.edu.

Here are the details on how to help with this project:

What I will be doing:
Creating an Open Educational Resource (OER) Textbook for an introductory-level Ethics
course.

What I need: A lot of people
to write a lot of chapters.

What you will do: Write a
chapter (or more) and release your work, for free, under a CC-BY license for
everyone to use for free in perpetuity. The chapters should each be less than 10 pages in length and
accessible to first-year college students with no philosophy background. The
way you approach the topic (including through the use of fiction) is entirely
up to you (subject to my approval and acceptance, of course).

-A list of which THREE chapters you would be
interested in writing (in order of preference) along with a BRIEF (no more than
3 sentences) summary of how you will approach the topic (include this in the
body of your email)

I will send out initial acceptances no later than January 31 and then I will consider and accept proposals on a
rolling, first-come first-accepted basis.

Below is the table of contents for the works I will be creating. Since
this textbook is for use in my own courses, I am ONLY looking for chapters that
cover these specific topics (at this time) and will provide the finished
product as a .DOCX file (in addition to a .PDF and .ePub) for anyone to reuse,
edit, and add to for their own purposes. Please select your THREE possible
chapters from the bolded options.
The full table of contents is included so that you get an idea of the work as a
whole.

Philosophy of Western Religions: An Open
Educational Resource

(italicized chapters indicate
chapters that already have authors, * indicates works in the public domain, and
bolded ones indicate chapters that are
open for proposals):

Unit One –
The Basics of Religions and The Nature of Belief

1: Philosophy of Religion, God, and
Theology

2: Cults, Extremism, and Fundamentalism

3: Faith, reason, and religious beliefs

4: What makes a religion special?

5: The Ethics of Belief: W.K. Clifford*

6: What does it mean to believe in God?

7: The case against religious belief

Unit Two –
The Existence of God

8: Anselm's Ontological Argument and
Gaunilo's Lost Island*

9: Aquinas' Cosmological Argument*

10: Objections to the Cosmological Argument

11: Paley’s Teleological Argument*

12: Objections to the Teleological Argument

13: Argument from Design

14: Criticisms of the Argument from Design

15: Pascal's Wager*

Unit Three –
Attributes of God

16: The various traits of God

17: What type of God is it rational to believe
in?

18: Can God do the impossible?

19: Hume's Problem of Evil*

20: Theodicies as a response to the Problem
of Evil

21: Free will and the traits of God

Unit Four –
The Evolution of Western Theistic Beliefs

22: Selections from The Gospel of Mark*

23: "Q", Jesus, and the Early
Church

24: Maimonides and Jewish Philosophy*

25: Selections from The Quran*

Unit Five –
The Good, The Bad, The Moral, and Society

26: What do we do about religious
disagreements?

27: Is it good to "have faith"?

28: Morality and Religion

29: Tolerance in a global society

30: Religion, the after-life, and immortality

Tentative Deadlines:
Call For Proposals out: Jan 1, 2019
Preferred consideration for proposals: Jan 31
Final deadline for proposals: Feb 15 (late proposals will still be considered if space allows)
Confirmation of Proposal acceptance: No later than Feb 16First draft of Chapters: March 15
It
would also be much appreciated if all authors can review and comment on
ONE other chapter. These will be assigned after the first drafts have
been received.
Chapters sent out for review: March 16
Deadline for comments on other chapters: April 1Deadline for final revisions: April 15
Completed draft of textbook out for author review: May 1
Deadline for comments on final draft: May 15Final version released: May 28

South and East Asian Philosophy Reader

Political Philosophy Reader

Critical Reasoning and Writing

The Digital Galleries of Our Minds

Download PDF[ePub]
A collection of three original sci-fi short stories about memories and how they relate to our identities. These stories are in the vein of Twilight Zone and Black Mirror, so if you enjoy either of those (or short fiction) check this out. Noah Levin's debut book.